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FIFA president Gianni Infantino has said his organization is studying the possibility of launching its own cryptocurrency.

This week, Infantino appeared at the World Liberty Forum hosted at President Donald Trump’s Mar-a-Lago resort in Palm Beach, Florida.

The event was attended by heavyweights in the finance industry including bankers, crypto executives, U.S. senators and celebrities like Nicki Minaj and Kevin O’Leary.

The president’s sons Eric Trump and Donald Trump Jr. were among the hosts of the event, which was also a showcase for the Trump family’s crypto initiative World Liberty Financial.

Infantino posted a recap of his appearance on Instagram, touting FIFA’s AI initiatives ahead of the 2026 World Cup that will ‘drive fan engagement, improve fan experiences, elevate global media distribution and broadcast, provide the 48 participating teams with additional match data, and further support the officiating of the 104 matches.’

The FIFA president also mooted the idea of global soccer’s governing body launching its very own crypto venture.

‘We are also studying the development of a FIFA token and a FIFA coin — a real potential global currency serving 6 billion football fans worldwide,’ he said.

Following his appearance at the World Liberty Forum, Infantino headed to Washington, D.C. where he was in attendance as Trump convened the first meeting of his Board of Peace.

At the meeting, Infantino announced FIFA was planning a $70 million investment in Gaza to help rebuild the war-torn region.

The global governing body said it plans to build “a complete football ecosystem’ including mini pitches, full-sized pitches, and academy and a national stadium.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

  • Actor Alfonso Ribeiro applies the intense, winning-focused mentality from his showbusiness career to parenting his sons in youth sports.
  • Ribeiro believes in teaching his children to take control of their own outcomes, a lesson he illustrates through baseball.
  • He has learned to temper his vocal intensity at games to avoid negatively impacting his children’s experience.

“I literally started working from Day 1 at 8 years old,” he says.

He has developed a mentality that he feels has kept him in his line of work for 46 years. It is now influencing his two sons, AJ, 12, and Anders, 10, when they play baseball.

“My boys would obviously agree to this, but I’m hardcore,” the actor-entertainer tells USA TODAY Sports. “Everything I do is about being the best, and most of that is because the only thing I understand is just the way that I view my life in show business: One person gets the job.

“So, with that idea in my mind, there’s only one option, and that is, you’re either first place, or you’re losing. Second place is the first loser. So for me, it’s about ultimately doing everything you can to be the best that you can be. Always.”

His sons, who are in the car with him during our phone interview, are smiling knowingly, he says. He is driving them to practice in Southern California. He has been out there since he was about their age. He moved from his home in New York City to play a character by the same first name on “Silver Spoons.”

“Alfonso” was Ricky Schroder’s easygoing best friend who liked to sing and dance.

Ribeiro had a longer-lasting – and cornier – role as Carlton Banks, Will Smith’s cousin, on another hit sitcom, “The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air.”

“Everyone thinks of me as the character that they know, but the person is very different from that,” says Ribeiro, 54. “My intensity level is through the roof.”

He believes it has gotten him to where he is. He also struggles, like us, to hold it together at his sons’ games so that it doesn’t brim over and become too much of a distraction.

“Nobody has ever said that I don’t share my thoughts,” he says.

We spoke with Ribeiro about how he tries to bring out his kids’ best qualities through sports, wherever it might lead them.

Our childhood is distinct from our kids’: Pull out what works best for everyone

Ribeiro, born in Harlem and raised in the residential Bronx section of Riverdale, put himself out there as a kid. He landed the part in that first audition for a PBS series, “Oye Willie,” and at 12 found himself starring in a Broadway musical, “The Tap Dance Kid’ and, soon after, a Pepsi commercial with Michael Jackson.

 “In my business, it’s all about winning, and one person gets the job, that’s the only person who’s gonna win,” he says. “So I don’t know anything other than what do we need to do to win? What do we need to do to be the best?”

Before you form an opinion about his sports parenting, let’s put his career in context. He rose to stardom during an era when 30-minute comedies like “Silver Spoons,” Diff’rent Strokes, “Who’s The Boss?” and “The Facts of Life” dealt with hard life lessons and family issues interspersed with humor.

As a sports dad, he has learned to make light of himself while still getting to the heart of potential issues.

“I do not try to get down on anybody,’ Ribeiro says about watching his sons play baseball. ‘It’s all positivity in what I’m trying to do, but I’m vocal and I share my thoughts. There are times when some bad calls go a certain way you know, I gotta go take a walk because I don’t want to mess it up for them by me being vocal or saying something confrontational.

“All those things don’t work well as a parent watching your kids play sports. So I recognize it and I’ve recognized it because there have been situations where I’ve been vocal and it didn’t work out well.”

‘Own the moment’: We can put our kids in position to succeed, but the game is in their hands

During his adult life, which has taken him to hosting “America’s Funniest Home Videos’ and ‘Dancing With the Stars” and acting in commercials, Ribeiro has become a PGA Tour ambassador, semipro golfer and professional race car driver.

His daughters, Sienna, 23, and Ava, 6, got into gymnastics, but Ribeiro has thrown himself into the kids sport with which he is most familiar. He grew up a New York Yankees fan – he’s still a diehard – and one of his first loves was baseball.

He tried football, but felt claustrophobic: “The first time I got tackled. I was face down in the mud and that was not working for me.”

Something about baseball pulled him back. As an adult, he realized their were so many lessons he could take from it.

“One of the things that we have in our house is you’re not allowed to look at a strike three,” Ribeiro says. “And people go, ‘Well, of course it’s gonna happen.’ We understand that, but going in, that’s probably the only thing today that I actually get upset at. And here’s my reasoning: As an African American in America, there are certain realities. And that is that when you leave it up to someone else to make a decision about your outcome, a whole lot of factors get added into that decision-making. I can’t leave it up to someone else to decide how my life is gonna turn out.

“So when you’re standing in the box and you’ve got two strikes, and someone throws a ball that’s on the edge, and you take it, hoping that the umpire is going to view it favorably for you, you’ve given that person that power to make you happy or to make you sad, to be righteous or to not. But when you’ve got the bat in your hand and you swing, you took control of that moment.

“So things like that are important to my overall reasoning behind playing certain sports: You take control, you own the moment, you make a mistake, you own your mistake, you recognize that it was a mistake. You move on from that mistake and you can’t wait for the ball to come to you again so that you can show that was a one-time mistake and that’s not who you are. So all of those things are part of my love of sport and my love of my children playing sports.”

Sports help us decipher between who we are and who people think we are

Ribeiro told comedian and actor Andrew Santino in 2021 for Santino’s “Whiskey Ginger” interview show that folks come up to him and call him “Carlton.”

During the 1980s and into Ribeiro’s “Fresh Prince” days of the 1990s, characters were spread across fewer channels. The ones we followed we felt we knew intimately.

Sometimes, we don’t want to comprehend that the person behind the character can be someone completely different.

Ribeiro credits his dad, a former correctional officer at a prison who became his manager, with separating reality from the fantasy world of television.

He has tried to do the same for his kids.

“Obviously, my goals are for them to be happy and to achieve the best that they can achieve, whatever that might be,” he says. “I don’t think any parent is like, ‘Nope, I don’t want them to play major league baseball.’ Of course, that’d be amazing, right? But I’m also not crazy and not delusional. It’s a long way and a long road to playing professional sports. And we have tons of professional athletes that are our friends. I’ve had those conversations and it’s like, ‘Yo, it’s one in a million.’

“We should probably not go at this like, ‘Oh, he’s gonna be the one in a million.’ ”

Still, the boys know their dad can be tough, but, he says, it’s all they know, similar to the way he felt as a child actor fighting for roles.

“It’s about what are we gonna do? What kind of work are we gonna put in? Are we puttin’ in the work to be great or are we accepting mediocrity,” he says. “I don’t accept it. So, in them at times they’ve got to deal with that kind of energy.

“You’re gonna have coaches that are gonna be hardcore with you. And if you can’t handle that, then you’re not gonna be successful in sports. So you’re gonna have coaches that coddle you, you’re gonna have coaches that are showing you all kinds of love. You’re gonna have coaches that won’t show you any love. I believe that my coaching style with my kids (brings out the truth) when you’re not putting in the work, when you’re not working hard enough, when you’re not doing what you need to do. When you’re not understanding what your goal is, then we’re gonna drill it till we get it right.”

Establish a baseline, but check in with your kids about what they want

We are almost to the field, where Ribeiro’s sons will have a group practice.

“As I’m talking to you, you probably feel some of the intensity of what I’m saying,” he says. “The one thing my boys know (is) that I want them to succeed. I want them to be great. Many different ways to get there. This just happens to be the one way that I understand it and know how to get there.

“I wouldn’t say (it’s) yelling. I would say stern intention. There’s very little need for yelling, but intensity is yelling and yelling is anger. Intensity is about intense focus, right? Intense feeling, passion.”

He sees those qualities in AJ and Anders in the backyard: “I’ve never seen two people more competitive. They’re constantly going at it.”

Ava, his younger daughter, “is a beast with gymnastics,” he says. “The worst she’s ever gotten in the overall is second place.”

He admittedly doesn’t spend as much time with her as with his sons, whom he started coaching when AJ was about six. Early on, when he used to help coach their teams, his energy came straight at them through throwing, catching, pitching and fielding instruction.

“I set a great baseline and now allow them to kind of do their thing,” he says.

To a point. AJ had a game where his batting technique seemed off. His dad didn’t say anything during the game, seeing if his son could work his way out of it. When it was over, Alfonso told his son what he saw.

“Well why didn’t you tell me?” was AJ’s response.

“So that’s my OK to give him information that I see,” his father says, “and then let him make whatever decision from it that he wants to make. He either wants to listen to it and do it, make the adjustment. That might be too big of an adjustment that day, so we’re not gonna do it, but give him the information and let him do with (it) as he pleases.’

As we all know, giving instructions to our kids mid-game can be a tricky practice. Ribeiro has checked with their coach about it. He laughs at the recollection.

“I will say that our coaches, as a rule, they’re not wanting you to do it,” he says. “I’ve had my own individual conversations with our coach. He doesn’t want it all the time. But he also wants the success. So he’s kind of OK with me.”

Know your kid and his or her sport, and have an open discussion about it. Be willing to concede.

Ribeiro says he has softened through the years.

“I now recognize that yes, it’s about winning, but it’s also about learning, and it’s about growing, and it’s about developing, and all of that is what gets you to winning,” he says. “So, we spend our time focusing on the fundamentals to be the best that we can be. But I am no holds barred, say it like it is … I don’t sugarcoat.”

“My boys now, they’re very little things to really work on (in the car),’ he says. ‘There might be a like, ‘Hey, what were you thinking in this situation?’ But it’s not like me getting down hard on them anymore. There was a time when I would.”

After he drops them off for practice, he says he’s going to grab a coffee and relax. He is learning, like all of us, to let them go.

“Educate yourself with the sport that you want your kids to play,” he says. “Know what type of kid you have. Is your kid someone who needs tough love? Do they need loving? Do they need, ‘We’re just gonna pretend.’”

He makes believe himself once a year at a golf event in Lake Tahoe, when he does the “Carlton Dance.”  

“I’ll do it on on the 17th hole but that’s about it,” he says. “It’s not for me.”

Borelli, aka Coach Steve, has been an editor and writer with USA TODAY since 1999. He spent 10 years coaching his two sons’ baseball and basketball teams. He and his wife, Colleen, are now sports parents for two high schoolers. His Coach Steve column is posted weekly. For his past columns, click here.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

Brazilian superstar Neymar has admitted he is considering retirement at the end of 2026.

In an interview with Brazilian online channel Caze, Neymar discussed how he is ‘living year to year,’ considering ending his illustrious career after an ‘important’ season for both club and country.

‘I don’t know what will happen from now on, I don’t know about next year,’ the 34-year-old said.

‘It may be that when December comes, I’ll want to retire. I’m living year to year now.

‘We will see what my heart decides. It depends on what my heart says later in the year.

‘This year is a very important year, not only for Santos, but also for the Brazilian national team, as it’s a World Cup year, and for me too. I wanted to play this season totally 100 percent.’

Returning to his boyhood club Santos in 2025, Neymar risked his career to help the team avoid relegation from Brazil’s Serie A.

Despite requiring surgery on his left knee, the Brazilian played a crucial role down the stretch, providing five goals and an assist in the final four league matches.

Neymar has played in three World Cups with Brazil, but hasn’t featured for the national team since October 2023. 

Often criticized for his antics on and off the pitch, Neymar established a brilliant club career, starring for the likes of Santos, FC Barcelona and PSG. Meanwhile, the 34-year-old is Brazil’s all-time leading scorer with 79 goals, a mark previously held by legend Pelé (77).

Neymar has a contract with Santos through the end of 2026.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

It wasn’t pretty, but Scottie Scheffler was barely able to extend his streak of cuts made on the PGA Tour at the Genesis Invitational at Riviera Country Club on Friday, Feb. 20.

Scheffler shot a 3-over 74 during Thursday’s first round, but bounced back for a 3-under 68 on Friday to get back to even, which was the cut line. He enters Saturday’s third round in a 10-way tie for 42nd place.

On the other side of the leaderboard sits Marco Penge and Jacob Bridgeman, both of who posted 7-under 64 scores on Friday and are tied for first at 12 under. Rory McIlroy has nearly matched them at 11 under, while Xander Schauffele and Adam Scott are lurking at 9 under.

Here’s how to watch the third round of the Genesis Invitational, including time, TV schedule and streaming information:

What channel is Genesis Invitational on today? Time, TV schedule

  • Start time: Third round begins at 10:15 a.m. ET
  • TV channel: Golf Channel (1 p.m.-3 p.m.); CBS and Paramount+ (3 p.m.-7 p.m.)
  • Streaming: Fubo (with a free trial), PGA Tour Live (10:15 a.m.-7 p.m.); NBC Sports App (1 p.m.-3 p.m.), CBSSports.com, CBS Sports app (3 p.m.-7 p.m.).

Watch Genesis Invitational on Fubo (free trial)

Genesis Invitational tee times for third round

  • 10:30 a.m. — Denny McCarthy
  • 10:35 a.m. — Viktor Hovland, Ryan Gerard
  • 10:45 a.m. — Scottie Scheffler, Matti Schmid
  • 10:55 a.m. — Patrick Cantlay, Robert MacIntyre
  • 11:05 a.m. — Ryo Hisatsune, Brian Harman
  • 11:15 a.m. — Hideki Matsuyama, Sam Stevens
  • 11:25 a.m. — Ben Griffin, Shane Lowry
  • 11:35 a.m. — Sami Välimäki, Sahith Theegala
  • 11:45 a.m. — Andrew Novak, Harris English
  • 11:55 a.m. — Tom Kim, Tony Finau
  • 12:10 p.m. — Ludvig Åberg, Patrick Rodgers
  • 12:20 p.m. — Si Woo Kim, Cameron Young
  • 12:30 p.m. — Nick Taylor, Corey Conners
  • 12:40 p.m. — Rickie Fowler, Alex Noren
  • 12:50 p.m. — Pierceson Coody, Akshay Bhatia
  • 1:00 p.m. — Matt McCarty, Taylor Pendrith
  • 1:10 p.m. — Sepp Straka, Jake Knapp
  • 1:20 p.m. — Jhonattan Vegas, Collin Morikawa
  • 1:30 p.m. — Max Homa, Jordan Spieth
  • 1:40 p.m. — Ryan Fox, Aaron Rai
  • 1:55 p.m. — Tommy Fleetwood, Aldrich Potgieter
  • 2:05 p.m. — Wyndham Clark, Kurt Kitayama
  • 2:15 p.m. — Min Woo Lee, Matt Fitzpatrick
  • 2:25 p.m. — Adam Scott, Max Greyserman
  • 2:35 p.m. — Rory McIlroy, Xander Schauffele
  • 2:45 p.m. — Marco Penge, Jacob Bridgeman

Genesis Invitational leaderboard

  • T1 — Jacob Bridgeman: −12
  • T1 — Marco Penge: −12
  • 3 — Rory McIlroy: −11
  • T4 — Xander Schauffele: −9
  • T4 — Adam Scott: −9
  • T6 — Max Greyserman: −8
  • T6 — Min Woo Lee: −8
  • T8 — Wyndham Clark: −7
  • T8 — Matt Fitzpatrick: −7
  • T8 — Tommy Fleetwood: −7
  • T8 — Kurt Kitayama: −7
  • T12 — Ryan Fox: −6
  • T12 — Max Homa: −6
  • T12 — Aldrich Potgieter: −6
  • T12 — Aaron Rai: −6
  • T16 — Collin Morikawa: −5
  • T16 — Jordan Spieth: −5
  • T16 — Jhonattan Vegas: −5
  • T19 — Jake Knapp: −4
  • T19 — Sepp Straka: −4
  • T21 — Akshay Bhatia: −3
  • T21 — Pierceson Coody: −3
  • T21 — Matt McCarty: −3
  • T21 — Taylor Pendrith: −3
  • T25 — Ludvig Åberg: −2
  • T25 — Corey Conners: −2
  • T25 — Rickie Fowler: −2
  • T25 — Si Woo Kim: −2
  • T25 — Alex Noren: −2
  • T25 — Patrick Rodgers: −2
  • T25 — Nick Taylor: −2
  • T25 — Cameron Young: −2
  • T33 — Harris English: E
  • T33 — Tony Finau: E
  • T33 — Ben Griffin: E
  • T33 — Tom Kim: E
  • T33 — Shane Lowry: E
  • T33 — Hideki Matsuyama: E
  • T33 — Andrew Novak: E
  • T33 — Sahith Theegala: E
  • T33 — Sami Välimäki: E
  • T42 — Patrick Cantlay: E
  • T42 — Ryan Gerard: E
  • T42 — Brian Harman: E
  • T42 — Ryo Hisatsune: E
  • T42 — Viktor Hovland: E
  • T42 — Robert MacIntyre: E
  • T42 — Denny McCarthy: E
  • T42 — Scottie Scheffler: E
  • T42 — Matthias Schmid: E
  • T42 — Sam Stevens: E
This post appeared first on USA TODAY

The Klaebo climb once again proved to be too much for his competitors.

Johannes Hoesflot Klaebo of Norway capped his dominance at the 2026 Winter Olympics by taking over in the last 1.5 kilometers of the 50 km mass start to earn his sixth gold medal these Games, finishing the race in 2:06:44.8.

Fellow countrymen Martin Loewstroem Nyenget and Emil Iversen took home the silver and bronze.

Klaebo now stands alone with the most gold medals won at a Winter Olympics, breaking a 36-year-old record by Eric Heiden. The American speed skater won five golds at the 1980 Winter Olympics in Lake Placid, New York.

Here’s how Klaebo made history at the 2026 Winter Olympics:

What events did Johannes Hoesflot Klaebo win?

Klaebo becomes the first athlete to win six gold medals at any winter Olympics. These are the events he won:

  • 10km + 10km skiathlon
  • Sprint classic
  • 10 km interval start free
  • 4 × 7.5km relay
  • Team sprint free
  • 50km mass start classic

Who has won the most gold medals in a Winter Olympics?

Klaebo, 29, now has the distinction of being the record-holder for most golds at a single Games.

  • Johannes Hoesflot Klaebo, Norway — 6 at 2026 Milano Cortina
  • Eric Heiden, USA — 5 at 1980 Lake Placid
  • Bjorn Dæhlie, Norway — 4 in 2002 Salt Lake City
  • Lyubov Yegorova, Unified Team/Russia — 3 in 1992 Albertville
  • Claudia Pechstein, Germany — 3 in 1994 Lillehammer
  • Marit Bjorgen, Norwat — 3 in 2010 Vancouver

How many Olympic medals does Johannes Hoesflot Klaebo have?

Klaebo has 13 career Olympic medals, including 11 golds, which is also an Olympic record. He joins American swimmer Michael Phelps, who won 23 gold medals, as the only Olympians with more than 10 career gold medals.

Klaebo helped Norway, with a population of fewer than six million people, score a record of now 18 gold medals, setting the mark for most golds at a single Winter Olympics.

This post appeared first on USA TODAY

In 1839, not long before President Donald Trump’s favorite president, Andrew Jackson, died, an admirer offered him an ancient roman sarcophagus, thought to have once held the remains of an emperor. Jackson, declined the offer, saying, ‘my republican feelings and principles forbid it.’ There may be a lesson here.

Since Trump returned to the White House just over a year ago, it seems like every single day something new is being named after him. The Kennedy Center, the Institute of Peace building, a new class of battleship, the Palm Beach airport and, who are we kidding, eventually the White House ballroom.

Meanwhile, a giant banner featuring Trump’s stern features was placed on the Department of Justice this week, not the first public building to be adorned with the visage of the president glaring down at us.

It all seems to have gone a bit too far, but not for the reasons generally cited. Instead, the pure quantity of Trump-branded government buildings is starting to diminish the meaning and impact of all of them.

To be clear, there is no risk of a major political backlash from voters as Trump’s name and image get plastered around Washington like posters for a Dave Matthews Band concert. People who hate him call it ‘Dear Leader’ fascism and people who love him takes selfies. Everyone else just shrugs and says, ‘Well, that’s Trump.’

Culturally, the question of whether naming everything after yourself is crass or unseemly is subjective and a matter of personal taste. As a priority to voters, it falls somewhere below good taste in music.

And after all, every city has its John F. Kennedy and Martin Luther King, Jr. boulevards, though, in fairness, they were killed, which is a major advantage if your goal is getting stuff named after you.

No, the real question is whether this avalanche of eponymous enterprises are burnishing, or diminishing, the president’s legacy, and in the far-seeing eyes of history, very often, less is more.

I get it, Trump spent his whole life making buildings grow out of the ground so he could slap his name on them, big as life and usually in gold. It is an admirable and very human impulse to leave something lasting.

The president was very good at leaving his mark. Trust me, I lived in New York City for 20 years, and you really can’t miss it. But now it turns out that all of that glass and steel is flimsy and impermanent compared to Trump the man, who, say what you will, will be spoken of and debated for centuries.

It is not in flinty metal or in the cold plastic of physical reality where Trump’s true legacy must now be forged. Rather, it is in the invisible fire of the future, where the man, not the buildings will be judged.

Trump has the immortality shot, with his bold vision not just in America but around the globe. He stands to be the most consequential figure of the early 21st century. We don’t need to name every county courthouse and 1-95 rest stop after him.

Throwing your name up everywhere in giant fonts is actually exactly the kind of eccentric behavior that gets mocked for thousands of years. Like Caligula threatening to make his horse a consul of Rome, it will be used by many to suggest narcissistic mania in Trump, because it already is used that way.

Trump is never going to be the modest Abe Lincoln type with the shawl and aw shucks, ‘Nobody will remember my speech,’ attitude. That’s cool, his braggadocio is fun. But I don’t want to live in a world where I check my Trump watch to see if it’s time for a Trump burger on my way to Trump airport.

As it turned out, ‘Old Hickory’ Andrew Jackson would be buried in a plain pine box, though the ancient treasure he declined is still housed by the Smithsonian. And instead of paying homage to him through a marble masterpiece, we keep little pictures of him in our pockets.

More importantly, our current commander in chief still draws on Jackson’s strength and values to this very day, fancy Roman sarcophagus or not.

The more things we name after Trump, the less it means, and the more it feels forced, when it needn’t be. Nobody, including Trump, has to convince us that he is a figure of historical magnitude. Seeing that advertised again and again starts to make it all seem a little bit cheapened.

This post appeared first on FOX NEWS

Is the concept of ‘equal time’ outdated on today’s broadcast networks? The Federal Communications Commission put regulations on the books in 1934 requiring equal air time for political candidates during an election season. But that doesn’t extend to cable, or to streaming, or to the booming podcast world. You could get technical and claim the broadcast networks often come to people today via cable or satellite connections, not an antenna.

FCC Chairman Brendan Carr recently suggested late-night comedy shows and daytime talk shows like ABC’s ‘The View’ could be evaluated for potential violations of the old equal-time rules. On Monday, Feb. 16, ‘Late Show’ host Stephen Colbert gaudily announced that he invited Texas state Democrat Rep. James Talarico for an interview, but lawyers told him ‘in no uncertain terms’ that he couldn’t do this, so he posted a Talarico interview on YouTube instead. When that YouTube video drew over 8 million views, it was painted by liberal journalists as a great victory over President Donald Trump. But Trump never objected to this interview.

Colbert had to unfurl the nightly rant about being a courageous dissident and all that rot: ‘Donald Trump’s administration wants to silence anyone who says anything bad about Trump on TV, because all Trump does is watch TV, OK? He’s like a toddler with too much screen time. He gets cranky and then drops a load in his diaper.’

Then, surprisingly, CBS put out a statement that suggested Colbert was a liar, that the interview was not banned: ‘The show was provided legal guidance that the broadcast could trigger the FCC equal time rule for two other candidates, including Rep. Jasmine Crockett.’ On Tuesday, Colbert sputtered. ‘They know damn well that every word of my script last night was approved by CBS’s lawyers.’

Colbert wasn’t in danger of having to invite Texas Republican Sen. John Cornyn. He might have to interview Crockett – who appeared on the show last year, before she was a candidate. This whole stunt could be painted as a campaign booster for Talarico, who raised millions of dollars off the appearance. 

Then came the weirdness of CBS News covering this spat, giving both sides equal time and weight. On Wednesday’s ‘CBS Mornings,’ reporter Elaine Quijano ran the opposing views, and then added another liberal view: ‘Monday was the first known time a late night talk show changed its programming since the FCC issued its new guidance. Anna Gomez, the only Democratic-appointed FCC commissioner, worries that decision could enable censorship.’

The ‘PBS News Hour’ also turned to Gomez for an attack on Trump and Carr: ‘Anything they don’t like, they want to control and they want to censor.’ Defunded PBS still sounds bitter.

The supreme irony in this entire kerfuffle is that Colbert represents the exact opposite of equal time. Overall, Alex Christy of NewsBusters reported that from September 2022 through Thursday, Colbert has brought on 230 liberal or Democrat guests, to only one Republican – and that Republican was former Rep. Liz Cheney after she was drummed out of office in a primary. So, let’s wink and say 231 to zero.

Stephen Colbert

CBS could easily change the name of its late-night comedy show to ‘The People’s Republic of Colbert.’ Anyone who wants to end their day by listening to a long interview with Vermont Independent Sen. Bernie Sanders is not looking for giggles. But that’s what viewers found on January 20. Colbert announced with fanfare that this was the 19th time he’d platformed Sanders.

This is not a ‘bona fide news interview,’ if we’re going to use FCC lingo. It’s the lamest kind of ‘Sunset Semester’ socialism session. ‘Define oligarchy for us’ isn’t even a question. It’s a prompt.

But Colbert also put this ball on the tee for Bernie:  ‘This is a red-letter day for you. Here you are administering the oath of office to Mayor Mamdani and I just—you’ve been fighting, you’ve been carrying the banner of democratic socialists for a long time. What was that like to swear in the first Democratic Socialist mayor of a major city?’ He found it ‘extremely gratifying.’

When that YouTube video drew over 8 million views, it was painted by liberal journalists as a great victory over President Donald Trump. But Trump never objected to this interview.

It was the same situation with Talarico – two Democrats talking like Democrats. Colbert nudged: ‘It’s not the first time you’ve caused some drama. ‘FCC opening probe into The View after appearance by Talarico.’ Do you mean to cause trouble?’

Overall, the late-night ‘comedy’ show guest count in 2025 was overwhelmingly stacked: 99% of the political guests are liberals or Democrats. It’s the same on ‘The View.’ In 2025, Whoopi & Co. interviewed 128 liberals or Democrats to two Republicans or sort-of conservatives. Again, that’s being generous. The two are now former Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene, who was fulminating against Trump, and Cheryl Hines, who was forced into defending her husband, HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr.

These are the shows that are the most passionately painting themselves as brave upholders of Democracy when they practice nothing of the sort. Only one side is worth hearing, and the other side is only worth smearing. 

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MILAN – Dylan Larkin admitted just how much this scenario had played in his mind.

He and his USA teammates had just dispatched Slovakia to advance to the final men’s hockey game of the 2026 Winter Olympics, hours after Canada clinched a spot. It’s the 4 Nations Face-Off final sequel but on the largest international stage possible, a chance to prove that the USA is the best of the best.

‘I’ve thought about it so much the last year, since the 4 Nations final,’ Larkin said. ‘I’m not even going to really go into how much I’ve thought about it as a kid, but that was just a dream. Last year after the 4 Nations, it turned into serious thoughts.

‘I think it’s what everyone wanted, is this matchup in the gold medal game.’

Matthew Tkachuk described the matchup as ‘what every American and Canadian grows up watching, grows up hearing about. This is the pinnacle of sport. This is as good as it gets, and a rivalry that’s as good as it gets. So there will be not one TV without this game on in the United States and in Canada, and that should get you pretty fired up.’

USA dispatched Slovakia with precision, turning a 2-0 start into a 6-2 rout that left Slovakian captain Tomas Tatar trying to put it into perspective as his team prepares to play Finland for bronze.

‘I think this was probably our worst game of the tournament,’ he said. ‘You have to admire the quality the team US have for sure, but this wasn’t the game that we play up until now. It kind of hurts, but tomorrow is a new day and we’re very proud to play a bronze medal game.’

For the USA, anything short of playing on Feb. 22 in the final game, would have disappointed. To do it opposite Canada?

‘Yeah, you can’t really script it any better than that,’ Brady Tkachuk said. ‘All we cared about is putting ourselves in that position, didn’t really matter who we were going to play. But now that it’s all set in stone, everything happens for a reason.

‘Just truly grateful to be in this position to achieve a childhood dream.

Canada came out golden when the sides have meet in the Olympic final during the NHL era, winning in 2002 and 2010. Those were deep teams, but this 2026 version is loaded with elite skill, 25 NHLers deep. It’s the first time since 2014 that NHL players have participated in the Olympics. The Americans have made the most of it, staying in the athletes village, two to a room, reveling in the atmosphere.

‘It’s an honor to be here,’ Matthew Tkachuk said. ‘It’s an honor to represent the United States. For us to be in the gold medal game, the chance to do something that very few Americans have been able to do, it’s just hard for me to wrap my head around right now.’

Coach Mike Sullivan spoke in the immediate aftermath of advancing of relishing the opportunity. USA men haven’t won an Olympic gold medal since the ‘Miracle on Ice’ team in 1980. Mike Eruzione, the captain of that team and the man who scored the golden goal, is in Milan. He sent the USA women an inspirational video before their match, showing his gold medal and telling them that’s the color they want.

It’s less about pressure, and more about the incredible privilege the Americans have earned by winning five games since arriving in Milan less than two weeks ago.

‘I think a lot of that is your outlook and perception at the opportunity you have in front of you,’ Sullivan said. ‘It’s an incredible opportunity we have in front of us to represent our nation, to inspire another generation of hockey players in the United States and to be in elite company, the third team to have the opportunity to win a gold medal. I know our guys are really excited about that opportunity. Having said that, that’s all it is. We have to go out and earn it and we’re really excited about that.’

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MILAN — Nearly 16,000 fans packed into Milano Santagiulia Ice Hockey Arena for Team USA’s semifinal win over Slovakia on Friday as the Americans punched their ticket to the gold-medal game against Canada on Sunday, Feb. 22.

But the team’s biggest supporter had the best seat in the house. After the USA’s 6-2 rout of Slovakia at the 2026 Winter Olympics, U.S. defenseman Charlie McAvoy said the late Johnny Gaudreau is ‘looking down on us right now. I’m sure he’s smiling as we’re getting ready to play for a gold medal.’

Gaudreau has provided inspiration for the U.S. men’s hockey team in its undefeated Olympic run, a team that Gaudreau likely would be part of if not for his tragic death. Gaudreau and his brother Matthew Gaudreau were struck and killed by a suspected drunk driver while cycling in New Jersey on Aug. 29, 2024.

Gaudreau was 31. Matthew Gaudreau was 29.

The U.S. men’s national team has kept Gaudreau’s memory alive. They hung his No. 13 jersey in the locker room in Milan, continuing a tradition that dates to last year’s 4 Nations Face-Off and the 2025 world championships.

‘He was a friend, a teammate to a lot of these guys. And the fact that our team is celebrating him throughout this tournament just speaks volumes for the character of the person that Johnny was,’ head coach Mike Sullivan said. ‘I know how much he meant to a lot of the guys in that room.’

McAvoy credited the team’s staff for making Gaudreau’s presence known throughout the tournament.

‘Our trainers really have … done a great job of hanging up Johnny’s jersey and keeping little reminders of him around in the room and with this group,’ McAvoy said. ‘Everything … has always had a touch of winning it for him and I think his family will be in there saying the same thing right now. So I’m really excited that we get a chance to do that, not only for ourselves, but for him.’

Gaudreau’s family was in attendance of Team USA’s semifinal win on Friday, a moment the family described as bittersweet. Ahead of the 2026 Games, his family shared that ‘representing Team USA at the Olympics was one of (Gaudreau) greatest dreams.’

“In that final summer, John was training harder than ever, with his dad, pushing himself to be in the best shape of his life. He was determined to earn his spot on that Olympic roster,’ the family wrote in a statement shared on X. “While it breaks our hearts that John won’t be there to live out that dream, we know he will be so very present with Team USA and all of his close friends competing throughout these games.”

Zach Werenski, who played with Gaudreau on the Columbus Blue Jackets, said his friend probably ‘would’ve been here’ on the team, pointing to Gaudreau’s international resume. Gaudreau led Team USA to a gold medal at the 2013 world junior championships in Russia with seven goals, the most in the tournament. He took bronze with the U.S. men’s national team at the 2018 world championships in Denmark.

‘I know how bad he wanted this,’ said Werenski. ‘He played in a number of world championships hoping for an opportunity for best on best. … So it’s super special to see his jersey hanging and we’re playing for him and trying to make him proud.’

An Olympic gold medal, the American men’s first since 1980, is on the line against Canada, and Werenski said the team will be fighting to ‘make (Gaudreau) proud.’

Reach USA TODAY National Women’s Sports Reporter Cydney Henderson at chenderson@gannett.com and follow her on X at@CydHenderson.

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For more than a month, Michal Weits has kept suitcases packed by the front door of her house in Tel Aviv.

‘We have our bags ready for weeks,’ she said. ‘Three weeks ago, there were rumors that it was the night the U.S. would attack Iran. At midnight, we pulled the kids out of their beds and drove to the north, where it is supposed to be safer.’

Weits, the artistic director of the international documentary film festival Docaviv, is speaking from her own traumatic experience. During the 12-day war, an Iranian missile struck her Tel Aviv home. She, her husband, and their two young children were inside the safe room when it collapsed on her.

‘After an Iranian missile hit our home and we lost everything we had, we also lost the feeling of ‘it won’t happen to me,’’ she said. ‘We are prepared, as much as it’s really possible.’

Weits remembers the surreal contrast of those days. Four days after being injured in the missile strike, while still in the hospital, she was told she had won an Emmy Award for the documentary she produced about the Nova massacre on Oct. 7.

‘Four days earlier an 800-kilogram explosive missile fell on our home and I was injured, and four days later I woke up on my birthday to news that I had won an Emmy,’ she said. ‘It can’t be more surreal than this. That is the experience of being Israeli, from zero to one hundred.’

She says Israelis have learned to live inside that swing. ‘Inside all of this, life continues,’ she said. ‘Kids go to school, you go to the supermarket, Purim arrives and you prepare, and you don’t know if any of it will actually happen. We didn’t make plans for this weekend because we don’t know what will happen.’

That gap — between visible routine and private fear — defines this moment. The fear she describes is now part of the national atmosphere.

On the surface, Israel looks normal. The beaches are crowded in the warm weather. Cafés are full. The Tel Aviv Stock Exchange has risen in recent days. Children go to school as Israelis prepare for the Jewish holiday of Purim and costumes are being prepared.

But inside homes and across local news broadcasts, one question dominates: when will it happen? When will President Donald Trump decide whether to strike Iran — and what will that mean for Israel?

Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has instructed the Home Front Command and emergency services to prepare for possible escalation, with Israeli media reporting a state of ‘maximum alert’ across security bodies.

Speaking at an officer graduation ceremony this week, Netanyahu warned Tehran: ‘If the ayatollahs make a mistake and attack us, they will face a response they cannot even imagine.’ He added that Israel is ‘prepared for any scenario.’

The military message was echoed by the IDF. ‘We are monitoring regional developments and are aware of the public discourse regarding Iran,’ IDF Spokesperson Brig. Gen. Effie Defrin said. ‘The IDF remains vigilant in defense, our eyes are open in every direction and our readiness in response to any change in the operational reality is greater than ever.’

Yet the psychological shift inside Israel goes deeper than official statements.

For years, Israelis lived with rockets from Hamas. The Iranian strikes felt different.

‘The level of destruction from Iran was something Israelis had not experienced before,’ said Israeli Iran expert Benny Sabti. ‘People are used to rockets from Gaza. This was a different scale of damage. It created real anxiety.’

Iron Dome, long seen as nearly impenetrable, was less effective against heavier Iranian missiles. Buildings collapsed. Entire neighborhoods were damaged.

‘People are still traumatized,’ Sabti said. ‘They are living on the edge for a long time now.’

At the same time, he stressed that the country is better prepared today.

‘There are feelings, and there are facts,’ Sabti said. ‘The facts are that Israel is better prepared now. The military level is doing serious preparation. They learned from the last round.’

The earlier wave of protests inside Iran had sparked hope in Israel that internal pressure might weaken or topple the regime. Weits told Fox News Digital, ‘I am angry at the Iranian government, not the Iranian people. I will be the first to travel there when it’s possible. I hope they will be able to be free — that all of us will be able to be free.’

Despite losing her home and suffering hearing damage from the blast, she says the greater loss was psychological. ‘There is no more complacency,’ she said. ‘The ‘it won’t happen to me’ feeling is gone.’

Across Israel, that sentiment resonates.

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